Advertisement
The Sapa Inca owned everything. He ruled everything. He made all the laws. He was all powerful. Many Sapa Incas came to power over time. Each was the head of government.
Each Sapa Inca put his relatives, along with the nobles, in positions of power, to help him rule the Inca empire. Each Sapa Inca had four top advisors, who make sure the relatives and nobles did the work they were assigned to do.
Each time a new tribe was conquered, a governor was put in charge of the new area. As the population grew, so did the number of government officials, including the number of tax collectors.
When a new law was put in place by the Sapa Inca, word went down the line from the top officials until it reached the bottom officials, and from there to the common people. Since the common people had no say in government, that was the law until a new law came down.
This system worked well, and the Inca population grew to about 12 million people.
Henry ford is the correct answer :)
They traded cloth, iron, and copper in raw and worked form, and cowry shells used by the local populations as currency.
In exchange for their wares, Europeans returned textiles, carvings, spices, ivory, gum, and African slaves.
Fredrick Douglass stood up to Covey and fought back and this was how he reacted to Edward Covey, the cruel slave "breaker" who often beat him. The correct option among all the options that are given in the question is the last option or option "D". At first Douglass tried to run away to his actual master but was sent back to Covey.
Answer: An air battle above the English Channel to prepare for an invasion of Britain.
It was an aerial battle as the Germans sent their air force to drop bombs on Britain.
Many civilians lost their lives and various buildings were destroyed but thanks to the leadership of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, the British people withstood the bombardment and the Royal Air Force fought back with U.S. support preventing Germany from conquering Britain.